Winston’s Jive Mixup was indeed a mixup. It was 1986 when Mbaqanga saxophonist Winston Nyaunda joined up with Adam Reinecke, a folky groove guitarist to form a new Jive band. Winston had learnt his trade playing penny-whistle on the streets of Joburg, later touring with the Soul Brothers and Mahlatini & the Mahotello Queens, and then went on to lead the exuberant ska/mbaqanga outfit the Dynamics.

The mid-80’s was a rough time in RSA, but there was a partying audience out there, needing to dance. Winston and Adam were joined by Sipho Duma, a keyboard player steeped in the Zulu traditional Maskande music tradition, trombonist Jannie Hanepoot van Tonder fresh from touring with the African Jazz Pioneers, and violinist Melissa James. After various rhythm section shake-ups, ex-Dynamics drummer Steve Howells came to liven things up, and the Jive Mixup soon became known as the liveliest act around town.

The music was a true cross-over, with the band-members from diverse backgrounds collaborating to explore mbaqanga, maskande, jive and even a bit of boeremusiek thrown in. There were legendary tours including performances at Jamesons and the Pool Club in Johannesburg, Indaba & the Mix in Cape Town, the Rainbow in Pinetown and CAW outside Durban.

A gig with Jive Mixup was inevitably a 3-hour marathon with the audience trying to out-do the band, while the 3-piece trombone/sax/violin front-line showed off their semi-choreographed moves in between playing tightly arranged harmonies, with Winston’s haunting saxophone solos churning the major scale in a way that would make any blues-man proud. – Jannie “Hanepoot” van Tonder